WARNING: Virgnia T Sherl made this note and was not rated by users as credible.

France tries paying people to cycle to work

 
Related

Stop Everything and Watch This Disney Princess Medley

Good News
742 points

Man Gives Old Shelter Dogs Free Haircuts So They Can Finally Find Homes

Good News
412 points



Most recent

Estos son los riesgos a los que se enfrentan los hogares inteligentes

Ciberseguridad
10 points

Pure Storage nombra a Joao Silva como vicepresidente para Europa, Medio Oriente, África y América La

Patricia Amaya Comunicaciones
12 points

Experiencia sensorial total en Ethernal Fest: música, gastronomía y tecnología

Comunicaciones
22 points

Los 100 días de Nicolas Toro.

Pablo Emilio Obando Acosta
16 points

Documento y momento

Juan Cantalatabla
12 points

Pure Storage ofrece nuevas capacidades de gestión de almacenamiento de autoservicio

Patricia Amaya Comunicaciones
20 points

¡Datos sin miedo al frío ni al calor! Kingston presenta SSD todoterreno para ambientes extremos

Prensa
14 points

En agosto nos vemos.

Pablo Emilio Obando Acosta
18 points

Usos de Home Assistant que te facilitarán tu vida

MaríaGeek
14 points

Miguel Sabido recibre premio de la Agrupación de Periodistas Teatrales.

Benjamin Bernal
14 points
SHARE
TWEET
FRANCE HAS STARTED a six-month experiment with paying people to cycle to work, joining other European governments in trying to boost bicycle use to boost people's health, reduce air pollution and cut fossil fuel consumption.

France tries paying people to cycle to work

Several countries including the Netherlands, Denmark, Germany, Belgium and Britain have bike-to-work schemes, with different kinds of incentives such as tax breaks, payments per kilometre and financial support for buying bicycles.

In France, some 20 companies and institutions employing a total of 10,000 people have signed up to pay their staff 25 euro cents (AUD$0.37) per kilometre biked to work, the transport ministry said in a statement on Monday.

French Transport Minister Frederic Cuvillier, noting that commuting using public transport and cars is already subsidised, said that if results of the test are promising, a second experiment on a larger scale will be undertaken.

The ministry hopes that the bike-to-work incentive scheme will boost bike use for commuting by 50 per cent from 2.4 per cent of all work-home journeys, or about 800 million km, with an average distance of 3.5 km per journey.

In Belgium, where a tax-free bike incentive scheme has been in place for more than five years, about eight per cent of all commutes are on bicycles. In the flat and bicycle-friendly Netherlands, it is about 25 per cent, cycling organisations say.

The Brussels-based European Cyclists' Federation has European Union funding to study best practices among various cycling incentive schemes, the group's Bike2Work project manager Randy Rzewnicki said.

City bike-loan schemes have played a large role in boosting bicycle commuting and cities including Barcelona, London and Stockholm have followed the model of the Velib in Paris.

Fuente: www.abc.net.au
WARNING: Virgnia T Sherl made this note and was not rated by users as credible.
SHARE
TWEET
To comment you must log in with your account or sign up!
Featured content